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Evaluation of EHDI Programs

Evaluation of EHDI Programs. National EHDI Coordinators Meeting Author and Presenter: Janet M. Farrell, Program Director MA Universal Newborn Hearing Screening Program Co-Author: Rashmi Dayalu, Epidemiologist February 23, 2011 Atlanta, GA. Why do we need to evaluate our EHDI programs?.

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Evaluation of EHDI Programs

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  1. Evaluation of EHDI Programs National EHDI Coordinators Meeting Author and Presenter: Janet M. Farrell, Program Director MA Universal Newborn Hearing Screening Program Co-Author: Rashmi Dayalu, Epidemiologist February 23, 2011 Atlanta, GA

  2. Why do we need to evaluate our EHDI programs? • Meet the needs of families we serve • Measure and improve performance • Evidence based approach/strategies • Evaluate success or challenges • Understand disparities • Educate and promote • Allocate resources • Motivate stakeholders • Contribute to literature

  3. Healthy People 2010 • Increase the proportion of newborns who are screened for hearing loss by age 1 month, have audiologic evaluation by age 3 months, and are enrolled in appropriate intervention services by age 6 months. • Potential data sources: State-based Early Hearing Detection and Intervention (EHDI) Program Network, CDC and/or specific State data.

  4. National EHDI Goals and Objectives • Goal 1. All newborns will be screened for hearing loss before 1 month of age, preferably before hospital discharge. • Goal 2. All infants who screen positive will have a diagnostic audiologic evaluation before 3 months of age. • Goal 3. All infants identified with hearing loss will receive appropriate early intervention services before 6 months of age (medical, audiologic, and early intervention).

  5. EHDI Goals Continued • Goal 4. All infants and children with late onset, progressive or acquired hearing loss will be identified at the earliest possible time. • Goal 5. All infants with hearing loss will have a medical home as defined by the American Academy of Pediatrics. • Goal 6. Every state will have a complete EHDI Tracking and Surveillance System that will minimize loss to follow-up.

  6. JCIH Year 2007 Position Statement: Principles and Guidelines for EHDI Programs • Outlines detailed information that can be used in developing evaluation strategies and action plans • Recommends periodic evaluation of EHDI Programs including: • Improving quality • Efficiency • Usefulness

  7. HRSA, Maternal and Child Health Bureau Block Grant Performance Measure • # 12. Percentage of newborns who have been screened for hearing before hospital discharge.

  8. Government Performance and Results Act (GPRA) – MCHB 1, 3, 6 goals: • # of infants with a positive screen who are lost to follow-up • # of infants with confirmed or suspected hearing loss referred to an ongoing source of comprehensive health care (medical home) • # of children with nonsyndromic hearing loss who have developmentally appropriate language and communication skills at school entry

  9. National EHDI Program Objectives and Performance Indicators • Provides a framework to measure standardized outcomes nationally • Informative and motivating for stakeholders • Practical tool for developing state goals and objectives • Valuable for grant writing

  10. A Comprehensive Approach to EHDI Evaluation • Identify staff skilled in high level data software • Analyze and clean data regularly • Start cleaning 2010 annual data now • Provides more time to follow-up with facilities and families • Understand your target population and who becomes lost to follow-up • Identify racial and ethnic, health, geographic and other disparities • Meet with families, stakeholders and consumers through focus groups to be certain program strategies meet the needs of the population served

  11. Logic Models, Diagrams, Systems Documentation • Childhood Hearing Data System • Data Flow Diagrams • Logic Models • Data Driven • Programmatic

  12. MA EHDI Data EBC Legal/Demographic Medical/Confidential Hearing Screening Diagnostic Assessment Procedures Type/Degree of Loss Risk Indicators CHDS Family Contact Follow-up/Referral Early Intervention Medical Home

  13. MA Quality Improvement • Hospital report cards (annual) • Quarterly data reports to birth facilities and diagnostic centers • Special emphasis on transferred infants • HL degree and type not determined • Verification of screening results for infants listed as passed and later identified with HL

  14. Annual Hospital Report Card Template

  15. Hospital Transfer Report

  16. Diagnostic Center Reports • Infants without a confirmatory diagnosis are listed on this report. They fall into one of the two most common categories: • Lost to follow-up/documentation • Diagnosis pending

  17. Examples of the data we evaluate in MA SCREENING • Missed screens (0.5%) - predominantly homebirths and transferred infants DIAGNOSTICS • Lost to follow-up (4.2%) – analyzed by geography • # diagnosed with hearing loss (>200) • Non-consents (2.2%) • Hearing loss by laterality of referral – 1 in 4 bilateral referrals were diagnosed with HL • Late onset HL - 25 out of 29 had risk indicator(s) • Laterality of HL by type and degree of loss • Risk indicators (# and percentage) • Median age at diagnosis (1.10 months in 2008) EARLY INTERVENTION • # lost to follow-up (19.8%) Annual EHDI MA Data 2008

  18. Age in Months of Diagnosis of HL

  19. Lost to Follow-up by Residential Region (2008)

  20. NICHQ Learning Collaborative Improve the health and well-being of children and youth with special health care needs • Through small tests of change (PDSA), reduce the number of home birth and transferred infants that miss a hearing screen • Partner with Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center and Brigham and Women’s Hospital

  21. PDSA Example Objective Reduce the number of missed hearing screenings for babies discharged from the NICU • Best method for tracking transferred infants since only birth hospital has access to EBC? • True missed vs. lost to documentation • What are the reasons for missing information? • Who determines if babies being transferred were in need of screening? • If babies were screened, were they screened again upon transfer?

  22. Plan and Do • Beth Israel and Brigham and Women’s Hospitals identified transfer facilities that received infants transferred out of their NICUs • UNHSP provided contacts for the screening program directors for those transfer facilities • Contacted 4 hospitals accepting at least 5 infants transferred from the NICU, for whom UNHSP was missing screening information • Confirmed if hearing screening was actually performed • UNHSP received a fax of results for all babies that had a hearing screen

  23. Study and Act • Analyzed number of true missed screens compared to number lost to documentation of screening results • Determined why infant(s) missed their screen or why screening information was not transmitted • Make policy or procedure changes accordingly

  24. Lessons learned • Most infants were screened, but data was never reported to UNHSP (lost to documentation) • Interpretations varied for when a transferred newborn should be screened • Many screening directors do not have access to census of babies transferred into their facility • Developed and disseminated new data transmittal form statewide • In collaboration with the Advisory Committee, update birth facility guidelines to include “best practices” algorithm for screening transferred infants Next steps

  25. Missed screens / unknown screen results: 2008 vs. 2007 From 2007 to 2008, there was a 41.4% decrease in the number of infants who missed a screen or had unknown results.

  26. Family Satisfaction Study • To determine the levels of families’ satisfaction and anxiety associated with the EHDI process • To determine what factors affect families satisfaction levels with the EHDI process • To assess whether or not a child’s hearing status affects the levels of satisfaction Three study groups • Families whose newborn passed • Families whose infants refer on their initial screening but passed outpatient screen or diagnostic • Families whose infants are identified with permanent hearing loss

  27. Satisfaction with Screening

  28. Satisfaction with Audiologist – Group 3

  29. Satisfaction with EI – Group 3

  30. If you had another baby, would you want him or her to have his or her hearing screened? • Group 1 = 99% • Group 2 = 99% • Group 3 = 98%

  31. Five Year Strategic Plan (2011-2016) • Hired an outside consultant • Assessed gaps, opportunities, feasibility, potential impact • Broad strategies • Specific tactics • Staff, families, stakeholders are included in the strategic planning vision process • Family meeting planned 3/11 (focus groups) • Conducted best practices interviews with other states • Developing vision, objectives and actions for newborn hearing screening for the next five years

  32. Mission: Providing strong leadership to create positive outcomes for children with hearing loss and their families Vision and Strategies (Early Hypothesis) • Awareness and education • Family support • Stakeholder Engagement • Policy • Surveillance and Evaluation • Interventions • Infrastructure

  33. Five Year Evaluation Strategy • Maintenance of high quality data • Timely analysis and dissemination of data • Monitor emerging trends and disparities • Studying Down syndrome diagnostic outcomes • Interest in evaluating EVA data • Develop systems to analyze developmental outcomes • Identify data sources and gather data on later identified children with HL

  34. Questionsjanet.farrell@state.ma.us617-624-5959

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